Even if the last thing the tapering US "recovery" needed is a surge in energy costs, it may soon be getting them following yet another news flashback, this time to the 2010 GOM disaster. Just headlines for now from Bloomberg:
- U.S. IS RESPONDING TO A LOSS OF WELL CONTROL IN GULF OF MEXICO
- GULF OF MEXICO EVENT OCCURRED AT SHIP SHOAL BLACK 225 PLATFORM
- GULF SITE POSSIBLE SHEEN IS OVER 4 MILES WIDE BY 3/4 MILE LONG
- ENERGY RESOURCES TECHNOLOGY GULF OF MEXICO OWNS PLATFORM: U.S.
- U.S.: COMPANY ASSESSMENT SAYS GAS FLOWING FROM GULF WELL
- U.S. SAYS ALL PLATFORM WORKERS SAFELY EVACUATED FROM PLATFORM
- U.S.: 2 OTHER WELLS ON PLATFORM B WERE PRODUCING AND WERE SHUT
- U.S. TO CONDUCT INVESTIGATION ON CAUSE OF GULF OF MEXICO EVENT
WTI meanwhile up another $0.70 just shy of $105. Time to rid the world of evil speculators once and for all.
The full story, which appeared earlier, in FuelFix:
Five workers were forced to evacuate a platform in the Gulf of Mexico on Monday evening when gas condensate began escaping from a Talos Energy well.
The decades-old well south of Louisiana has been inactive for 15 years and was in the process of being permanently abandoned. As workers conducted plugging and abandonment operations on Monday, salt water containing a small amount of gas and light condensate began to flow from the well, said Talos Energy president Timothy Duncan.
“In an abundance of caution, we decided to evacuate the platform and mobilize our spill response team,” Duncan said. “We are focused on the safety of our personnel while taking all appropriate measures to limit any environmental impact.”
Duncan speculated that the age of the tubing may have contributed to the incident.
Because the well taps into an old field first developed in the 1970s and was producing mostly water at a low-flowing pressure of 175 pounds per square inch when it was last operational in 1998, the new discharge may be leaking slowly with relatively few hydrocarbons.
Still, a light rainbow sheen was detected at the site. Workers estimated the sheen spanned an area four miles wide by three quarters of a mile long.
Duncan said the company was “doing everything we can to have the well under control as soon as possible, which we expect to be within the next 24 hours.”
Workers returned to the site Tuesday to work to bring the well under control.
The Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement and Coast Guard are overseeing Talos’ response and will conduct an investigation of the incident. Agency officials are stationed at a command center in Houston, monitoring well control and pollution response efforts.
Coast Guard and safety bureau officials conducted an overflight of the site Tuesday and documented natural gas flowing from the well.
Two other wells at the platform were producing at the time and have subsequently been shut-in, federal officials said.
A private, Houston-based oil and gas company, Talos acquired the well from Energy Resource Technology in February.
The leaking well is located in Ship Shoal block 225, about 74 miles southwest of Port Fourchon, La. The facility has been the subject of an active idol iron removal program, approved by federal regulators at the safety bureau, under which Talos decommissions and removes old structures.